PostScript Standard Encoding

The PostScript Standard Encoding (often spelled StandardEncoding, aliased as PostScript[1]) is one of the character sets (or encoding vectors) used by Adobe Systems' PostScript (PS) since 1984 (1982).[2] In 1995, IBM assigned code page 1276 to this character set.[3] NeXT based the character set for its NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP operating systems on this one.

Character set

The following table shows the PostScript Standard Encoding. Each character is shown with a potential Unicode equivalent. Code points differing from the NeXT character set are shown boxed. Codepoints 00hex (0) to 7Fhex (127) are nearly identical to ASCII (the characters at positions 27hex and 60hex reflect an earlier interpretation of the visual appearance of those ASCII characters than the interpretation that was formalized in Unicode). The upper half of the table contains punctuation and typographic characters, currency symbols, ligatured letters, a selection of modified base letters used in European languages, and a selection of diacritic marks to be used in composing accented letters.

  Letter   Number   Punctuation   Symbol   Other   undefined

PostScript Standard Encoding[4][2][5][3][1][6][7]
_0 _1 _2 _3 _4 _5 _6 _7 _8 _9 _A _B _C _D _E _F
0_ NUL
0000
0
SOH
0001
1
STX
0002
2
ETX
0003
3
EOT
0004
4
ENQ
0005
5
ACK
0006
6
BEL
0007
7
BS
0008
8
HT
0009
9
LF
000A
10
VT
000B
11
FF
000C
12
CR
000D
13
SO
000E
14
SI
000F
15
1_ DLE
0010
16
DC1
0011
17
DC2
0012
18
DC3
0013
19
DC4
0014
20
NAK
0015
21
SYN
0016
22
ETB
0017
23
CAN
0018
24
EM
0019
25
SUB
001A
26
ESC
001B
27
FS
001C
28
GS
001D
29
RS
001E
30
US
001F
31
2_ SP
0020
32
!
0021
33
"
0022
34
#
0023
35
$
0024
36
%
0025
37
&
0026
38

2019[4]
39
(
0028
40
)
0029
41
*
002A
42
+
002B
43
,
002C
44
-
002D
45
.
002E
46
/
002F
47
3_ 0
0030
48
1
0031
49
2
0032
50
3
0033
51
4
0034
52
5
0035
53
6
0036
54
7
0037
55
8
0038
56
9
0039
57
:
003A
58
;
003B
59
<
003C
60
=
003D
61
>
003E
62
?
003F
63
4_ @
0040
64
A
0041
65
B
0042
66
C
0043
67
D
0044
68
E
0045
69
F
0046
70
G
0047
71
H
0048
72
I
0049
73
J
004A
74
K
004B
75
L
004C
76
M
004D
77
N
004E
78
O
004F
79
5_ P
0050
80
Q
0051
81
R
0052
82
S
0053
83
T
0054
84
U
0055
85
V
0056
86
W
0057
87
X
0058
88
Y
0059
89
Z
005A
90
[
005B
91
\
005C
92
]
005D
93
^
005E
94
_
005F
95
6_
2018[4]
96
a
0061
97
b
0062
98
c
0063
99
d
0064
100
e
0065
101
f
0066
102
g
0067
103
h
0068
104
i
0069
105
j
006A
106
k
006B
107
l
006C
108
m
006D
109
n
006E
110
o
006F
111
7_ p
0070
112
q
0071
113
r
0072
114
s
0073
115
t
0074
116
u
0075
117
v
0076
118
w
0077
119
x
0078
120
y
0079
121
z
007A
122
{
007B
123
|
007C
124
}
007D
125
~
007E
126
DEL
007F
127
8_  
 
128
 
 
129
 
 
130
 
 
131
 
 
132
 
 
133
 
 
134
 
 
135
 
 
136
 
 
137
 
 
138
 
 
139
 
 
140
 
 
141
 
 
142
 
 
143
9_  
 
144
 
 
145
 
 
146
 
 
147
 
 
148
 
 
149
 
 
150
 
 
151
 
 
152
 
 
153
 
 
154
 
 
155
 
 
156
 
 
157
 
 
158
 
 
159
A_  
 
160
¡
00A1
161
¢
00A2
162
£
00A3
163
()
2044 (2215)[4]
164
¥
00A5
165
ƒ
0192
166
§
00A7
167
¤
00A4
168
'
0027
169

201C
170
«
00AB
171

2039
172

203A
173

FB01
174

FB02
175
B_  
 
176

2013
177

2020
178

2021
179
· ()
00B7 (2219)[4]
180
 
 
181

00B6
182

2022
183

201A
184

201E
185

201D
186
»
00BB
187

2026
188

2030
189
 
 
190
¿
00BF
191
C_  
 
192
`
0060[4]
193
´
00B4[4]
194
ˆ
02C6[4]
195
˜
02DC[4]
196
¯ (ˉ)
00AF (02C9)[4]
197
˘
02D8[4]
198
˙
02D9[4]
199
¨
00A8[4]
200
 
 
201
˚
02DA[4]
202
¸
00B8[4]
203
 
 
204
˝
02DD[4]
205
˛
02DB[4]
206
ˇ
02C7[4]
207
D_
2014
208
 
 
209
 
 
210
 
 
211
 
 
212
 
 
213
 
 
214
 
 
215
 
 
216
 
 
217
 
 
218
 
 
219
 
 
220
 
 
221
 
 
222
 
 
223
E_  
 
224
Æ
00C6
225
 
 
226
ª
00AA
227
 
 
228
 
 
229
 
 
230
 
 
231
Ł
0141
232
Ø
00D8
233
Œ
0152
234
º
00BA
235
 
 
236
 
 
237
 
 
238
 
 
239
F_  
 
240
æ
00E6
241
 
 
242
 
 
243
 
 
244
ı
0131
245
 
 
246
 
 
247
ł
0142
248
ø
00F8
249
œ
0153
250
ß
00DF
251
 
 
252
 
 
253
 
 
254
 
 
255
_0_1_2_3_4_5_6_7_8_9_A_B_C_D_E_F

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Czyborra, Roman (1998-06-27). "Codepage & Co". AdobeStandardEncoding. Archived from the original on 2016-12-06. Retrieved 2016-12-06.
  2. 1 2 Adobe Systems Incorporated (February 1999) [1985]. PostScript Language Reference Manual (PDF) (1st printing, 3rd ed.). Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. ISBN 0-201-37922-8. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-02-18. Retrieved 2017-02-18. (NB. This book is informally called "red book" due to its red cover.)
  3. 1 2 "SBCS code page information - CPGID: 01276 / Name: Adobe (PostScript) Standard Encoding". IBM Software: Globalization: Coded character sets and related resources: Code pages by CPGID: Code page identifiers. IBM. 1995-07-14 [1995-07-01]. C-H 3-3220-050. Archived from the original on 2017-02-18. Retrieved 2017-02-18.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 "Adobe Standard Encoding to Unicode". 1.0. Unicode, Inc. 2011-07-12 [1995-05-05]. Retrieved 2017-02-25.
  5. Adobe Systems Incorporated (1990) [1985]. PostScript Language Reference Manual (2nd ed.). Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. (NB. This edition also contains a description of Display PostScript, which is no longer discussed in the third edition.)
  6. Sicherman, George (2011). "PostScript Standard Encoding". Archived from the original on 2017-02-18. Retrieved 2017-02-18.
  7. Kostis, Kosta (2000). "Adobe StandardEncoding Encoding Vector". 1.20. Archived from the original on 2017-02-18. Retrieved 2017-02-18.
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